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U.S. Recognized Armenian Genocide

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  • U.S. Recognized Armenian Genocide

    U.S. RECOGNIZED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Harut Sassounian

    KarabakhOpen
    12-06-2008 15:53:07

    In 1951, World Court Document Reveals

    While President Bush and several of his predecessors have avoided
    characterizing the organized mass killings of Armenians in 1915 as
    genocide, it has recently come to light that 57 years ago the United
    States government officially recognized the Armenian Genocide in
    a document submitted to the International Court of Justice (ICJ),
    also known as the World Court.

    This half a century old reference to the Armenian Genocide was
    discovered by Prof. William A. Schabas who posted it on the website
    "PhD Studies in Human Rights," on June 4, 2008. Prof. Schabas, a
    world renown expert on genocide and international law, is director
    of The Irish Center for Human Rights at the National University of
    Ireland, Galway.

    This document, filed by the Government of the United States with ICJ,
    is included in the May 28, 1951 ICJ Report titled: "Reservations to the
    Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide."

    The specific reference to the Armenian Genocide appears on page 25
    of the ICJ Report: "The Genocide Convention resulted from the inhuman
    and barbarous practices which prevailed in certain countries prior to
    and during World War II, when entire religious, racial and national
    minority groups were threatened with and subjected to deliberate
    extermination. The practice of genocide has occurred throughout human
    history. The Roman persecution of the Christians, the Turkish massacres
    of Armenians, the extermination of millions of Jews and Poles by the
    Nazis are outstanding examples of the crime of genocide."

    This is a very significant statement as it was made by the
    American government of that time with the sole intent of telling
    the truth, without taking into account any political or other
    considerations. Neither Armenians nor Turks had lobbied for or against
    the U.S. statement. In other words, it was simply made on the basis
    of historical facts.

    How different is the situation today when the White House readily
    caves in to threats and pressures from the Turkish government to
    prevent the House of Representatives from passing a commemorative
    resolution on the Armenian Genocide!

    Now that this critical filing by the United States government before
    the International Court of Justice has been discovered, it is no
    longer necessary to exert excessive efforts to try and reaffirm the
    facts of the Armenian Genocide by the U.S. Congress, particularly
    since the House of Representatives adopted Resolutions 247 and 148
    in 1975 and 1984 respectively, to commemorate the Armenian Genocide.

    Furthermore, there is no particular reason to insist that the next
    President of the United States acknowledge the Armenian Genocide since
    President Ronald Reagan, back on April 22, 1981, issued Presidential
    Proclamation Number 4838 which stated: "Like the genocide of the
    Armenians before it, and the genocide of the Cambodians which followed
    it - and like too many other such persecutions of too many other
    peoples - the lessons of the Holocaust must never be forgotten."
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